lol, I thought this was going to be about the HUGE ******* RED BANNER on the front page advertising some net neutrality cause that even paying members are forced to see. Now THAT'S inappropriate advertising!

The ads you see are from the kind of sites you visit so don't act all offended.

Actually, that's not always true.

I play in season long salary cap contests in Fantasy Baseball and Fantasy Football at FanTrax.com.

I first joined FanTrax in 2011.

I had joined Match.com and eHarmony.com in January 2004, and discontinued both by August 2004. I never went to other questionable dating sites. Yet all that is ever advertised on FanTrax are sites like AsianDate.com, or sites to date Russians, Phillipino women, or a couple of sites where "Woman makes the first move", like I think one of them is Charmerly.com (could be off with that one).

I have never actually clicked any of those ads, and the computer I owned back in 2004 was long gone by 2011. Lived in a different house in a different city by 2011 as well than in 2004, so it isn't always the kinds of sites you visit.

Sometimes it can be, as I have occasionally seen ads on other sites aside from FanTrax that would advertise things like chess shops, but that isn't always the case everywhere.

Net neutrality only favours the biggest hoggers of the net, I wonder who that could be? Could it be the the American tax dodging multinationals?

This, basically. Silicon Valley is pushing net neutrality hard because they want to keep their costs down, and they're rallying useful idiots behind them by going on about 'muh censorship,' when nobody censors people harder than these big tech companies.

Net neutrality only favours the biggest hoggers of the net, I wonder who that could be? Could it be the the American tax dodging multinationals?

This, basically. Silicon Valley is pushing net neutrality hard because they want to keep their costs down, and they're rallying useful idiots behind them by going on about 'muh censorship,' when nobody censors people harder than these big tech companies.